Page:Books on Egypt and Chaldaea, Vol. 32--Legends of the Gods.pdf/130

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EGYPTIAN LITERATURE.

THE HISTORY OF CREATION--A.

The Book of knowing the evolutions[1] of Rā, and of overthrowing Āpep. [These are] the words which the god Neb-er-tcher spake after he had come into being:--"I am he who came into being in the form of the god Kheperȧ, and I am the creator of that which came into being, that is to say, I am the creator of everything which came into being; now the things which I created, and which came forth out of my mouth after that I had come into being myself were exceedingly many. The sky (or, heaven) had not come into being, the earth did not exist, and the children of the earth,[2] and the creeping things, had not been made at that time. I myself raised them up from out of Nu,[3] from a state of helpless inertness. I found no place whereon I could stand. I worked a charm[4] upon my own heart (or, will), I laid the foundation [of things] by Maāt,[5] and I made everything which had form. I was [then] one by myself, for I had not emitted from myself the god Shu, and I had not spit out from myself the goddess Tefnut; and there existed no

  1. Kheperu. The verb kheper means "to make, to form, to produce, to become, and to roll"; kheperu here means "the things which come into being through the rollings of the ball of the god Kheper (the roller)," i.e, the Sun.
  2. I.e., serpents and snakes, or perhaps plants.
  3. The primeval watery mass which was the source and origin of all beings and things.
  4. I.e., he uttered a magical formula.
  5. I.e., by exact and definite rules.